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Trump's pick to oversee US public lands faces Senate hearing

Former North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum is due before a Senate committee Thursday as lawmakers consider the Republican's nomination to be chief steward of U.S. public lands and waters.
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FILE - Gov. Doug Burgum, R-N.D., chats at the New York Stock Exchange before President-elect Donald Trump arrives to ring the opening bell, Dec. 12, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

Former North Dakota Gov. is due before a Senate committee Thursday as lawmakers consider the Republican's nomination to be chief steward of U.S. public lands and waters.

President-elect Donald Trump in November tapped Burgum to be interior secretary and to lead the new , which is charged with promoting oil, gas and other energy development.

The Interior Department oversees a half-billion acres of federal land and vast areas offshore. Combined those areas produce about one-quarter of U.S. oil, or more than 1 billion barrels of crude annually, making them a in the debate over how to address climate change.

President Joe Biden's administration scaled back new oil and gas sales from public reserves as part of its efforts to curb climate change. Nevertheless, oil production hit under the Democrat as high prices spurred drilling on lands that were previously leased.

Burgum is an ultra-wealthy software industry entrepreneur who grew up on his family’s farm. The two-term governor of oil-rich North Dakota endorsed Trump after ending his own 2024 presidential bid.

The energy council he would chair could play a key role in Trump’s effort to sell more oil and other energy sources to allies in Europe and around the globe.

Trump has been hostile to renewable energy including offshore wind. It's uncertain how that rhetoric will translate into policies at the Interior Department.

North Dakota is among numerous states that have seen a rapid expansion of wind power in recent years. Burgum outlined plans as governor to make the state carbon neutral by 2030. And a pipeline that would be used to capture greenhouse gases blamed in climate change and store them underground.

Burgum has described such projects as lucrative business opportunities. Carbon-capture say the technology is untested at scale and allows the fossil-fuel industry to continue largely unchanged.

The Interior Department's mandate extends beyond fossil fuels to include grazing, mining, fish and wildlife conservation, the National Park system and trust responsibilities for more than 500 Native American and Alaska Native tribes.

Trump's first term featured bitter fights over actions that rolled back protections for endangered species and accelerated approvals for highways, pipelines and other projects. Those moves were largely blocked by lawsuits or reversed under Biden.

Thursday's hearing before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee comes after protesters on Wednesday repeatedly interrupted proceedings for another member of Trump's energy team — secretary of energy nominee

Wright pledged to promote all sources of American energy and acknowledged burning fossil fuels causes .

Matthew Brown, The Associated Press

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